John Wilson

[African-American Sculptor, Born 1922] Museums and Art GalleriesOther SitesArticlesMuseums and Art Galleries: DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park , Massachusetts Eternal Presence Fine Art Services: ArtPrice Art Market Auction Records Search Artprice's up-to-date database of art auction records for John Wilson and over other artists (payment is required in order to see the actual selling price). Free "express check-in" is required for access to advanced search features and to be notified of upcoming auctions for your selected artists. Click here for more details about Artprice Artprice now offers artist biographies , artist sample signatures and unlimited-access memberships Other Web Sites: University of Wisconsin Articles: Search Millions of Published Articles for John Wilsonfree trial eLibrary registration required to see full text) Victorian Art Old Masters Great Photography Edgar Degas Tamara de Lempicka Andrew Wyeth Great Art from AllPosters.com

2. Wilson John Cook From FOLDOC wilson john Cook. history of philosophy, biography English logicianand philosopher (18491915). Although he had studied with Greenhttp://www.swif.uniba.it/lei/foldop/foldoc.cgi?Wilson John Cook

John Bauchop The Blind Immigrant Head stone of John Bauchop located in the Arbon Cemetery, Blossburg. John Bauchop Born Feb. 22, 1808 Died July 24, 1886 A native of Scotland Webmaster's note: I felt the following tale should be told as it is one of those little stories that are handed down by word of mouth from generation to generation within a family. Many immigrants sold their homes and possessions in order to pay for their passage to America, only to be denied entry upon arriving because of health reasons. Their return passage cost them nothing but having sold everything to pay for the passage over there was nothing to return to. William B. Wilson was one of the young boys involved and it is ironic that as Secretary of Labor the Department of Immigration would fall under his jurisdiction. John Bauchop was the father of Helen Nelson Bauchop Wilson, William's mother. John had worked all his life as a blacksmith in Scotland. After years of watching the red hot coals of the smithy's fire, he lost his sight. Although he was blind his eyes were clear, therefore no one could tell he could not see by looking at his eyes. At the time he could not have legally come to America because of his blindness. When Helen and the children sailed to America, John was with them. During the passage from Scotland Helen's two young sons would lead John along the ship's deck one holding on to each of his hands. Everyone would see this and think that John was taking the young boys for a walk. John felt so comfortable being lead by the boys that when they landed in America no one questioned the elderly grandfather who was leading his two young grandsons one in each hand. Thus John Bauchop was able to get through the point of entry without being detected.

HAIRE Wilson John

Nationality : email address website Title Along The Sloughs Of Ulster First Produced : 1969 London First Published : Unpublished Genre : Male : Female : Other : Theatre Company : Notes : Synopsis : Title Bloom Of The Diamond Stone First Produced : 1973 Abbey Theatre, Dublin First Published : 1979 Pluto Press, London Genre : Play Male : Female : Other : Theatre Company : Notes : Synopsis : Boy/girl relationship in Belfast factory runs into difficulties due to their different backgrounds Title Clockin' Hen, The First Produced : 1968 London First Published : Unpublished Genre : Male : Female : Other : Theatre Company : Notes : Synopsis : Title Diamond, Bone And Hammer, The First Produced : 1969 London First Published : Unpublished Genre : Male : Female : Other : Theatre Company : Notes : Synopsis : Title Echoes From A Concrete Canyon First Produced : 1975 London First Published : Unpublished Genre : Male : Female : Other : Theatre Company : Notes : Synopsis : Title Lost Worlds First Produced : 1978 Cottesloe, National, London

9. Wilson: John James wilson john James Peacefully with his family at his side at Grey BruceHealth Services in Owen Sound on Tuesday, September 24, 2002.http://www.funeral-cast.com/2002/DNM-wilsonjohn.htm

Home Wilson: John James Date of Death September 24th 2002 Wilson: John James Peacefully with his family at his side at Grey Bruce Health Services in Owen Sound on Tuesday, September 24, 2002. John Wilson of Owen Sound in his 87 th year. Beloved husband of Leona (nee Gunn). Dear father of Linda Morrison of Owen Sound and Marie and her husband Dave Thompson of Bognor. Lovingly remembered by two grandchildren, Duane Morrison and his wife Michelle of Holland Centre, Lori and her husband Michael Hall of Grimsby and one great-grandson Kieryn Morrison. Predeceased by his son-in-law Ken Morrison and his sister Marguerite and her late husband Carl Pentland. Friends are invited to the Tannahill Funeral Home for visiting on Thursday from 2  4 and 7  9 p.m. The funeral service will be conducted in the chapel on Friday, September 27

10. John Wilson - ResearchIndex Document Query 1993) (Correct) (1 citation) Shield Design for Missions to the Moon and Mars JohnWilso for Missions to the Moon and Mars John W. Wilson, John E. Nealy, Walterhttp://citeseer.nj.nec.com/cs?q=John Wilson

format this article to printWILSON, JOHN (1804-1836). John Wilson, Alamo defender, son of John and Jane (Nevin) Wilson, was born in Pennsylvania in 1804. He was one of at least six John Wilsons in the Texan army during the Texas Revolution. qv Very little is known about him other than he died in the battle of the Alamo qv on March 6, 1836. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Daughters of the American Revolution, The Alamo Heroes and Their Revolutionary Ancestors (San Antonio, 1976). Amelia W. Williams, A Critical Study of the Siege of the Alamo and of the Personnel of Its Defenders (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, 1931; rpt., Southwestern Historical Quarterly 36-37 [April 1933-April 1934]). Bill Groneman top of pageaboutsearchhelp ... suggest an article topic The Handbook of Texas Online is a joint project of The General Libraries at the University of Texas at Austin and the Texas State Historical Association

16. John Wilson A contractor for manufacturing companies with experience in production engineering, industrial engineering, production management, assembly machine design, work study, MTM, MTM2, kanban and keizen.http://website.lineone.net/~troubleshooters

John Wilson

Show birthplace locationPrevious (Chronologically) NextBiographies IndexPrevious (Alphabetically) NextMain indexJohn Wilson attended school in Kendal. From there he entered Peterhouse, Cambridge and he was the Senior Wrangler in 1761. This means that he was the best of all the First Class students to graduate after taking the Mathematical Tripos. Before he took his final examinations Wilson had already gained a strong reputation and he had also attracted considerable attention by defending Waring , who was the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, from strong attacks which had been made on him as a result of his text Miscellanea analytica. In 1764 Wilson was elected a Fellow of Peterhouse and he taught mathematics at Cambridge with great skill, quickly gaining an outstanding reputation for himself. However, he was not to continue in the world of university teaching, for in 1766 he began a legal career. It was a highly successful career, too. He became a member of the Court of Common Pleas in 1786 which had been set up to make judgements in cases of civil disputes between individuals. At the time that Wilson served on this body it was one of three courts which dealt with common-law business. He is best known for Wilson's theorem which states that ... if p is prime then p is divisible by p This result was first published by Waring , without proof, and attributed to Wilson.

18. Wilson_John john wilson. Born 6 Aug 1741 in Applethwaite, Westmoreland, England Died 18 Oct1793 in Kendal, Westmoreland, England. john wilson attended school in Kendal.http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Wilson_John.html

John Wilson

Show birthplace locationPrevious (Chronologically) NextBiographies IndexPrevious (Alphabetically) NextMain indexJohn Wilson attended school in Kendal. From there he entered Peterhouse, Cambridge and he was the Senior Wrangler in 1761. This means that he was the best of all the First Class students to graduate after taking the Mathematical Tripos. Before he took his final examinations Wilson had already gained a strong reputation and he had also attracted considerable attention by defending Waring , who was the Lucasian Professor of Mathematics, from strong attacks which had been made on him as a result of his text Miscellanea analytica. In 1764 Wilson was elected a Fellow of Peterhouse and he taught mathematics at Cambridge with great skill, quickly gaining an outstanding reputation for himself. However, he was not to continue in the world of university teaching, for in 1766 he began a legal career. It was a highly successful career, too. He became a member of the Court of Common Pleas in 1786 which had been set up to make judgements in cases of civil disputes between individuals. At the time that Wilson served on this body it was one of three courts which dealt with common-law business. He is best known for Wilson's theorem which states that ... if p is prime then p is divisible by p This result was first published by Waring , without proof, and attributed to Wilson.

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20. John Constable Excerpts from the article by Simon wilson and a collection of images.http://www.artchive.com/artchive/C/constable.html

John Constable images and biography The Artchive needs EVERYONE to help! If you enjoy this site, please click hereto find out how YOU can help to keep it online. Search artchive.com and wwar.comVIEW IMAGE LIST "Unlike Turner , Constable entered the art world fairly late in life, and he made painfully slow progress once he was in it. Born at East Bergholt, Suffolk, the son of a prosperous corn merchant, John Constable spent several years in the family business before deciding, and obtaining permission, to study painting full-time. Before he went to the Royal Academy schools in 1799 (the same year that Turner, only very slightly older, was elected as an Associate) he had acquired some sort of grounding however: his spare time had been passed with the local plumber and artist, John Dunthorne; he had been introduced to the connoisseur Sir George Beaumont and had been shown his Claude 'Hagar and the Angel'; and he had made friends with two artists-cum-antiquarians, John Cranch and J.T. Smith, assisting the latter with his etchings of picturesque cottages and with his research on Gainsborough . Once in London, Constable studied Old Master landscapes in the collections of Beaumont, Beckford and the influential Academician Joseph Farington. Constable continued to study and copy the work of his predecessors for as long as he lived, constantly measuring their interpretations of the natural world against his own experience of it. In 1802 he exhibited at the Academy for the first time and also received an invitation to become a drawing master at a military establishment. This he rejected, having now set himself a more ambitious goal. Constable returned one day from Beaumont's collection 'with a deep conviction', he told Dunthorne, 'of the truth of Sir Joshua Reynolds's observation that "there is no